Anonymous wrote:We've been on my employer's Aetna PPO for a few years (DH, 2 y/o, and I). It is expensive, the coverage isn't fabulous, and having my daughter was VERY expensive. We're looking to TTC again and I'm thinking of switching to the Aetna Open HMO. The monthly premiums and OOP would be much better, and all of the doctors we currently see accept both plans. But I don't know anyone that's made the switch from a PPO to HMO, my HR is no help, and I'm nervous that I'll regret it, especially if we do get pregnant this year. Has anyone switched from a PPO to HMO? Did you love it or regret it? What should I consider before making the decision?
Anonymous wrote:I'm comparing the Fed BCBS PPO and the Carefirst BlueChoice HMO (also BCBS network) does anyone have experience with them? I have a great PCP who would give me referrals over the phone- would it be worth trying the HMO?
Anonymous wrote:I had an hmo when I got pregnant (in October of previous year); it was annoying to have to go to my pcp before getting a referral to an ob. There are already so many appointments for pregnancy, it was a stupid one to have to go to for pretty much no reason. (It wasn’t just the appt. it caused an unrelated-to-this-discussion insurance claim issue and dealing with several phone calls about that too). Just for me to get an OB referral.
Anyway baby was born under a ppo bc I changed my insurance at the new year. It was SO GREAT, because I had complications and saw a few other specialists after the birth. I’m glad to didn’t have to go through my pcp for those appointments.
Now, we have a simple year ahead, I hope, and I’m considering saving a few hundred dollars/month and going back to an hmo. Still annoying and potentially costly, but I think the savings could be worth it for us. I’m hoping we don’t need to use insurance much anyway!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your family have any health issues? If yes, i wouldn't switch. Things will rise unknowingly of course but i we don't have a health condition, any plan is as good as the other.
But, if you are worry about getting pregnant and delivery. Maybe just wait till April to start really planning for baby 2. That way, the baby won't come till 2019! You can change back during open season.
Thanks, OP here. No major health conditions and DH's allergist (he's getting allergy shots) takes the HMO as well. What was really annoying with the PPO was that tests and ultrasounds were covered at 85%, so I was constantly writing $100+ checks for ultrasounds, blood work, and other routine testing. Then I ended up being in the hospital for almost a week and the baby needed the NICU and specialists, so the delivery and postpartum care was really expensive. I'd like to avoid the next pregnancy costing $5,000-10,000, but not if it limits the care or providers we have access to.
Anonymous wrote:Does your family have any health issues? If yes, i wouldn't switch. Things will rise unknowingly of course but i we don't have a health condition, any plan is as good as the other.
But, if you are worry about getting pregnant and delivery. Maybe just wait till April to start really planning for baby 2. That way, the baby won't come till 2019! You can change back during open season.